Cell membrane penetrating function of the nuclear localization sequence in human cytokine IL-1α.

2014 
Cytokines are released from the cell, bind to their receptors, and affect cellular responses. The precursor form of interleukin 1 alpha (pIL-1α) has a nuclear localization sequence (NLS) that causes it to be localized to the nucleus and regulate specific gene expression. The amino acids of the NLS are basic amino acid-rich sequences, as is the cell penetrating peptide (CPP), which has been widely studied as a way to deliver macromolecules into cells. Here, we hypothesized that the NLS in pIL-1α (pIL-1αNLS) can penetrate the cell membrane and it could deliver macromolecules such as protein in vivo. We characterized cell membrane penetration ability of pIL-1αNLS or its tandem repeated form (2pIL-1αNLS) to enhance its intracellular delivery efficiency. 2pIL-1αNLS showed comparable protein delivery efficiency to TAT–CPP and it mediates endocytosis following heparan sulfate interaction. 2pIL-1αNLS conjugated enhanced green fluorescence protein was localized to the nucleus and the cytoplasm. Intra-peritoneal administration of 2pIL-1αNLS conjugated dTomato protein showed remarkable in vivo intracellular delivery efficiency in various tissues including spleen, liver, and intestine in mice. Moreover, cytotoxicity of 2pIL-1αNLS was not observed even at 100 μM. Our results demonstrate cell membrane-penetrating function of NLS in pIL-1α, which can be used as a safe therapeutic macromolecular delivery peptide.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    50
    References
    17
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []